There has been rumbling in some quarters that I “try too
hard and study too much” and I “do extra credit.” To respond to these notions,
I’ve put together an educational post designed to shed light on the grad school
workload. There are NO opportunities for extra credit in grad school. One earns
grades from the required assignments and everything is graded on a rubric.
I’d like to debunk the notion that I “try too hard.” On my
first assignment for class #2, I realized that I’d spent several hours doing
the wrong assignment and then proceeded to quickly do the correct assignment
and hand it in. I got the top grade. I was surprised to hear that this was not
the case for my peers who were complaining that their case study papers were
considered not long enough and there was not enough information provided in the
case study to work with (but did you know about Google? It’s a very useful
research tool). I do, however, put more effort into high-value assignments for
instructors that have strict grading requirements.
This semester was one of my most difficult semesters ever
for multiple personal and professional reasons. For the first time in my
current job, I decided to take 2 classes because both are completely online
(saving travel time) and one was easier. The second 7-week class ran
concurrently with the first 14-week class and began in mid-semester when the
first was well underway and major projects were due.
By the Numbers
Class #1
- 1,500 words weekly for several essay response questions and a journal entry
- 50 words weekly for discussion board
- 100 pages of reading a week
- 28 total double-spaced pages for final paper (plus reading and researching to gather information for paper; 15 pages minimum, excluding title and reference pages)
- 12 total double-spaced pages for 3 short papers (plus reading journal article that formed the basis for the papers; 9 pages required, excluding title and reference pages)
Class #2
- 120 pages of reading each week
- 300 words weekly for discussion board
- 14 total double-spaced pages for final paper (plus reading and researching to gather information for paper; 10 pages minimum, excluding title and references)
- 8 single-spaced pages for business case studies
- 5 PowerPoint slides for group project (plus 3 conference calls and reading to develop slides)
The Result
My grade point streak continues!! I now have 3
more classes to complete and will graduate in December 2013 or May 2014.
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